ppl. a. [UN-1 8.] Not raised, in various senses of the verb.

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1523.  Ld. Berners, Froiss., I. cccxxxviii. 529. So yt by their neglygence the Siege shulde nat be vnreysed.

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1599.  Shaks., Hen. V., Prol. 9. The flat vnraysed Spirits, that hath dar’d, On this vnworthy Scaffold, to bring forth So great an Obiect.

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1694.  Dryden, To Sir G. Kneller, 55. Flat Faces,… Such as in Bantam’s Embassy were seen, Unrais’d, unrounded.

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1697.  D. F., Char. Dr. S. Annesley, 6. When Griefs come threatning on, or Comfort flows, He was undepress’d by these, unrais’d by those.

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1809–14.  Wordsw., Excurs., IV. 959. Go, demand Of mighty Nature, if ’twas ever meant That we should pry far off, yet be unraised.

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1817.  Coleridge, Biog. Lit., II. 132. The poem … is for the greater part written in language, as unraised and naked as any perhaps in the two volumes.

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1873.  Herschel, Pop. Lect., i. § 7. 6. The raised portion still stands up above the unraised.

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